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During Blackout, Ham Radio Shined

Mark Cantrell writes "An interesting bit on AP through Yahoo today. Seems that ham radio (which recently had a bit of backlash here on Slashdot from a few people thinking it was useless, outdated technology), really shined through during the blackouts. When the power went, ham radio operators, using battery backup power, were able to help coordinate emergency workers while the cell phone networks were overloaded. For anyone wondering why interference due to power line broadband is considered a bad thing, well, there ya go."

18 of 476 comments (clear)

  1. Power line emissions by Mawen · · Score: 5, Funny

    ....Right, because when the power is out, those power lines sure generate a lot of interference.

  2. Phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Man, what happened to those phones you needed to crank up??

  3. Interference from boradband by Neurotensor · · Score: 1, Funny

    Fortunately the interference from power-line broadband wasn't an issue at the time ;)

  4. Re:I told you so! by dcavanaugh · · Score: 2, Funny
    Agreed. It's easy to think ham radio is obsolete, UNTIL the power goes out or the cellular network goes byebye. If cell phones relied on Windows, the first hundred or so viruses that came along would make ham radio VERY popular.

  5. shined, shone by spasm · · Score: 4, Funny

    Shone! Shone! Dear God, 'shined' hasn't been used as a past tense since the 1700s!

    So Timothy is a time traveller from the 1700s. That explains a lot of slashdot spelling now that I think about it

    Ok, the coffee is kicking in now.

  6. Re:Outdated my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Yeah, my ham ISP sucks, too! Maybe the same idiot's running it... why one time at an office party, this guy's wife @##$@#$%@R NO CARRIER

  7. Haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    And you New Yorkers made fun of all us southerners with our pickups and 12 foot CB antennas.

  8. Ham Joke by cnb · · Score: 5, Funny

    An blonde chick ran out of gas one night and a dude pulled over to offer assistance. She got in the car and noticed he had all kinds of radio equipment in the car and several antennas outside. She asked what that was all about. He explained he was a Ham radio operator and he could talk to anywhere in the world from right here in his car. She asked "Anywhere in the world?" and he assured her he could. "Even in Poland?" she asked. "Yes, even Poland." She said "Wow, my mother lives in Poland and today is her birthday. I'd do anything if I could tell her Happy Birthday." He said "You'd do anything?" She said "Yes, anything." So he pulled over on the top of a hill and pulled out his dick and said "Get with it." She grabbed ahold of it and bent over and said "Happy Birthday, Mom."

    1. Re:Ham Joke by SlashCrunchPop · · Score: 2, Funny

      And what did her mom say?

  9. Re:But... by Kotukunui · · Score: 2, Funny

    Pigeons is the answer.

    We would have TCP/IP ( ....where the IP stands for Internet Pigeon)

    Each one would be tattooed with the appropriate packet type and given a little bag to hold a punched card of data.

    You would just number your pigeons, give them their cards and let them go.
    Routers would just be called "lofts" and the full message could be put together once all the pigeons had arrived by whatever route they felt was necessary.

    Requesting a re-transmission of a dropped packet (damned rednecks and their shotguns) would be a hassle though.

  10. Re:Was my savior. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    " I'm a paramedic in NYC"

    Wow, just 3 weeks ago you were a Unix sys admin in California. Why the sudden career change? Nice try troll.

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=74520&cid=66 84 080

  11. Re:As if /.'ers care by antibryce · · Score: 5, Funny
    Being a slashdotter means never having to say you're sorry when you ostracize a seemingly archaic, yet dependable, technology that shows its worth when all else fails.


    er, I thought we liked UNIX on Slashdot. Did I not get the memo?

    Oh, you meant ham radio! Nevermind...

  12. Big difference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    CB prerequisites: For starters, you must have seen "Convoy" or "Smokey and the Bandit", both preferably. The phrases 'breaker breaker 1-9' and 'you get a copy on me good buddy' must be standard in your vocabulary. Do you have a cap that has either a John Deere or a CAT logo on it? Get one, ASAP. Your profession must be driving a long haul truck, or if you are a true civilian, your vehicle must be be a 70s Trans Am, a beat up truck, or maybe a tractor. A gun rack with an axe handle is a must. The women you bed will all be found at rest stop diners, with big hair and say things like 'Hun", "Shug" or "Darlin'". Grow some sideburns and you'll be set.

  13. Point of information by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Funny

    There wasn't much powerline or RF interference during this particular event...

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  14. Re:Cuz we can't rely on battery -- you are right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Are you trying to sound Eastern European? I've done it better for you below:

    In Caribbean, cell tower transmits YOU!

    That is way use generators!! Batteries there until generators come on line. What is why you do not want digial phones in home as only phone. They rely on house power. MA Bell (or kids) still use generators to help keep phone on, so 911 working.

    Best system seen was in Caribbean. Single base cell tower... Batteries keep on line for 30 minutes and THREE generators each with THREE fuel tanks, and all buried. Any generator with 1 fuel tank run the system for 24 hours, including satellite uplink. That is total of 9 days without refueling. This to insure if hurricane came though with tower standing, still on air. Also had spare towers being setup in less than 4 hours.

  15. Re:Well, I could have predicted this. by Fjornir · · Score: 2, Funny
    This is why we burn candles during blackouts.

    Perhaps, sir, you should reflect a moment longer?

    Certainly, candles are nice in a number of situations -- when electricity is unavailable, when tradition is important (weddings, churches, whatever), when elctricity isn't appropriate ("OK Junior! Blow out those light bulbs on your birthday cake!" just won't work!), or for a certain sort of ambience -- even excepting the romantic candle-lit dinners the vast majority of us slashdotters will never enjoy more than once with the same person, some time in candle light is a salve for the soul when you sleep days and work nights under those harsh fluorescents in front of the CRT in the cold, windy, lab...

    But the fact is that anyone can use a candle, a ham requires at least some expertise. And we don't do anything to discourage teens from lighting candles (except maybe searching their backpacks for drugs when they go to the Laser Floyd show at the planetarium) like we do to keep Hams from even trying it out.

    If we want the Hams there for us Next Time, we need to make sure we've got Hams Next Time.

    --
    I want a new world. I think this one is broken.
  16. SHONE. Ham radio SHONE. by Bertie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sorry, but that sort of illiteracy's bloody annoying.

  17. Re:What in the F?! by srussell · · Score: 2, Funny
    And when the Axis of Evil detonates a series of EMP devices that fries all of your delicate, fragile electronics, all you damned HAM radio operators will be pretty sorry that you drove the telegraph operators out of business. You'll be whining because we don't have a network of telegraph lines and volunteers who can understand morse code and coordinate emergency services.

    Durned upstarts.

    (Speaking as someone who doesn't know any HAM operators, doesn't use HAM radios, and who's perfectly capable of taking care of myself in any short-term power outage.)